Tag Archives: google
How can be ppc advertising beneficial to you?
How can small advertisers gain benefit by advertising on Google adwords
If you are a small business owner in any part of the world, still people around you and your potential buyers are always looking for something related to your business on the internet. And may not all, but few of your buyers might surely be buying something on the internet. Then why can’t they buy your product on internet? For small business owners, following are the benefits available by Google adwords PPC advertising platform:
* – Biggest benefit: Get you position on 1st page on Google, in couple of hours.
* – You can keep your expenditure controlled in your hands.
*?? You can spend even $1 per day OR $100000 per day. Highly flexible budget options are available.
*?? You can target your ads to appear in your local region only and not to whole state, country or world.
*?? You can control the position of your ads.
*?? You can target high end and rich buyers.
*?? You can beat your local competition by gaining first mover advantage.
and there are tons of more benefits that you can gain..
So, you not advertise your business on Google adwords? If you wish to go ahead, please remember that you must always hire the Adwords Certified Partners / Companies to make your PPC advertising successful. Adwords certified PPC professionals are highly trained and have spent lots of time in learning the whole pay per click management strategies. So, make sure you go for a reliable PPC management company and get you business on internet.
Paid Search Versus Search Engine Optimization
Rumors that Google offers tech help in achieving better organic search results placement to those who drop big money on paid search results have long circulated. They appear to have been true, at least in a few situations, according to minutes of technical assistance meetings between Google’s engineers and some of its big ad spenders. The bottom line is that the engineers were giving away information that was mostly the kind of stuff you or I might find in the Webmaster Guidelines. Is that information more valuable coming from the mouths of Google’s tech wizards than it is coming from the Webmaster tools? It’s hard to say for sure.
Is this something the average webmaster should be up in arms about? Maybe not. The big spending advertisers make up most of Google’s revenue for paid search. Any business with a brain will do what they can to hang onto their best customers. That’s why Google designates an account representative for each major advertiser. It’s a bit of a chicken or egg situation: did Google do this to keep its biggest customers happy, or did the big customers feel entitled to technical help, having written checks with lots of zeroes on them?
The big divide, it would appear, is between the advertiser with a small budget and an advertiser with a big budget. If Google is providing face time with its engineers to the big advertisers, is it possible they’ll kick in some other perks in the future? While it’s easy to go all slippery slope with this, it does make you wonder. If Google, as it maintains, never sells higher ranking in search results, are they indirectly doing it by letting big ad spenders meet with their engineers? Are the big companies getting the recipes with the real secret ingredients, or do they get the same as you or I get from the webmaster tools, only straight from the engineers rather than the help pages?
Most internet users find organic search results much more relevant than paid search advertisements, but “most” doesn’t mean 90% – it’s more like 61%. In other words, nearly 40% find paid search ads more relevant than organically generated ones. This means that paid search versus organic search isn’t so much an either / or proposition as it is a “how much SEO versus how much paid placement” proposition.
Studies, such as one done by iProspect in 2004 teased apart the various sectors of the over all internet user demographic and determined that how much you emphasize organic versus paid search depends on five things:
1. Gender – A higher percentage of women than men like paid search ads 2. Employment Level – A higher level of partially employed, unemployed, and users who did not graduate college find paid search results more relevant 3. Education – The more educated a user is, the more likely he or she will prefer organic search results in terms of relevancy 4. Length of Internet Experience – the more years a person has been using the internet, the more relevant they find organic search results 5. Frequency of Use of Internet – the more often a user gets on the internet, the more relevant they tend to find organic search results
However, it’s important to note that in all these categories, organic search results prevailed by splits of 65%/35% to 60%/40%. So no matter what demographic your site targets, you can’t discount search engine optimization, even if you put a lot of money into online advertising. You can’t throw all your eggs in one basket and hope to succeed at e-commerce.
Here’s an analogy. Have you ever been shopping in the springtime for plants for your garden and marveled at the selection of tall, bright flowers that are already blooming? Chances are good that the nursery they came from added lots of fertilizer of the type designed to produce lots of quick growth and blooming. The thing is, the root structure isn’t always that great, so you have to be careful transplanting them so that you’ll get good root growth, because without good roots, those early forced blooms will fade quickly and not be replaced with the kind gained from long-term care.
Your paid search results can get you some quick growth right off the bat, but if you don’t have the root structure of good content, frequent updating, and smart use of keywords and tags, those paid results can’t prop you up for very long. Sure, you can always start a new advertising campaign to goose your site’s ranking, but that alone isn’t enough to get you steady, sustained growth over the long term. It’s not an either / or proposition: both are necessary for the best results.